15 Awesome Words That You Should Include in Your Writing:

luuciifeer:

Vex. To cause someone to feel annoyed, frustrated, or worried.

Example: You take delight in vexing me by deliberately using bad grammar.

Portmanteau. A large suitcase or trunk that opens into two equal parts.

Example: That portmanteau will not fit in the overhead bin and must be checked.

Naught. Means zero or nothing. It can also mean to ruin, disregard, or despise.

Example: Her behavior tends to set propriety at naught.

Foible. A weakness or eccentricity in someone’s character.

Example: She loved him in spite of his foibles.

Parvenu. A person who has suddenly risen to a higher social or economic class, but who has not gained social acceptance in that class.

Example: He was treated like a parvenu at the country club dinner.

Sentinel. A soldier or guard who keeps watch; to keep guard or watch.

Example: Bennett heard a strange noise and asked the sentinel to stay close.

Moribund. At the point of death; dying.

Example: Kathryn was unsure how to save her moribund career.

Beslobber. To smear with spittle or anything running from the mouth.

Example: In this drunken and beslobbered state, the lieutenant returned to the ship.

Nonplussed. Bewildered or unsure how to respond.

Example: Anna’s hot and cold behavior has left me completely nonplussed.

Loquacious. Means talkative or continually chattering.

Example: Jane was pleased that her new assistant was not particularly loquacious.

Forbear. To refrain or resist; to be tolerant or patient if provoked.

Example: My approach this year has been to forbear and maintain a professional demeanor at all times.

Erudite. An educated or learned person; scholarly with an emphasis on knowledge gained from books.

Example: “Not everything is in your books,” Steve told his erudite friend.

Mellifluous. Means smooth or sweet and is generally used to describe a person’s voice, tone, or writing style.

Example: Patrick O’Brian’s style is best described as mellifluous, sweeping the reader along from the first words.

Redolent. Fragrant or sweet smelling; strongly reminiscent or suggestive of something.

Example: These words are redolent of earlier times, when language was more formal.

Denouement. The final resolution of a story or a complex series of events.

Example: Will the denouement be explosive or serene?

“Please, I’ve been so silent.
Please let me be cruel for once.”

-a series of feelings, P.C.

5 notes     6 years ago      
RB

“Start writing, no matter what. The water does not flow until the faucet is turned on.”

-Louis L’Amour (via feellng)

#words 

“If you’re writing about a character, if he’s a powerful character, unless you give him vulnerability I don’t think he’ll be as interesting to the reader.”

-Stan Lee (via fictionwritingtips)

“Write a short story every week. It’s not possible to write 52 bad short stories in a row.”

-Ray Bradbury
(via everything4writers)

199 notes     6 years ago     via / source  
RB
#goals  #words 

Yeah I don’t expect for people to read my work but I’m gonna start publishing them anyways. Everyday. 7 days a week. I’ll start by posting once a day and then gradually increase the amount as I find my own pace. I’ll post anything, everything that I write. (Yes, even the horrible ones and there are gonna be lots of them but that’s okay cause I have to start somewhere) be it short stories, poems, haikus, journal entries, drafts, basically anything that I might have taken the effort to write on paper or jot down in my memo. I’m doing this to keep track of my progress and my goal is to make this a daily habit. I’ll be setting up deadlines so I could discipline myself cause I’m such a lazy ass. Hopefully, I might end up with something productive :)

1 note     6 years ago      
RB

“Write through the mess. Write through poor grammar and awkward tense changes and switches in POV. Keep writing even when you know as you’ve known nothing else before that what you’re writing is worthless. When you’re in the middle, good and bad are meaningless. Just keep writing.”

-Joe Bunting

59 notes     6 years ago      
RB

“If there’s a book you really want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.”

-Toni Morrison

3 notes     6 years ago      
RB